riioisu HE WESTERN GUARDIAN AGENTS: Mn John Pond. 81 Church Street-Phone :39 SUMMERS]!!! llld PIIINCE COUNT} New‘, subscriptins. Advertising should ho left with Mrs. Pond, t Guardian may he bought gully 6:. of the following no,“ h, Bwrutoro, Water Street. Gourliee Drugstore, wlgu- 5; g Bflery, Water Etrzelttl. Mazk Gsudst, 81 Granville str::ei.h'°n'° The Guardian will i, g u" to my homo in Summerlld . ler Boy M. 2o pier day or 100 ‘lair ‘wreck. Phone 289 for tin, "n"; l‘: ,, your order to t e 00y rvsllone e or deliveries on your route, __ g _____________ rolurrra is reserved for news of ' hl“|ru.l. but advertising u! s q alrruro uiny be Inserted st 8 ‘u. word, strictly payable is lflfGc Ms - t —BUY Purina. Pl. Growens 5"“ *- I-asa-lo-ls-fi. lP-couivcir. MEETING Post- ONE!) _. Th, “gum, monthly meellhi of the Summerslde to n gyrfillllits lrzoT pieréqorsrs council which w... ,0 have be“; us¥,,.__.c y u st ay oi lug Co.. . held last night ha, been poflponed nslilgltll, ‘owiill’: to Mayor campben x being RDER Snlclt Gill or bag neri ‘glib? hi0 attend u he 1s wnrloed ‘ma, L-859-10-15-2i. 011w with s heavy cold,‘ Riki YE Oct. 20th for FTee- .Z('[l Clllucli hot chicken L-39l (Continued from page 1) mu .\'r PORT mu.- .» (icllill occurred Saturday {of ills Albert Rowe, Vwife of l States. ‘ —- c..\'.li t‘lll._HL Port Hill. Mrs} The British authorities regard r 1 _ ill pool" health a‘l. the safe arrival of several impel-g. ilfi llllll broil llllllfl’ treat- ! itlhticonvovs in recent weeks as a n ilu‘ Prillcc County l-{os_l “ct-owl advantage rather than as a i llllr hurl recently returned vgo n" there have nt ii ,9, ficslrlcs her ‘husband there. ms fgovcrlrl Sllllill children left t0 ‘ m. at been no le- of anv German surface raid-, tfirildi? "fifitititl ‘i “°‘-.°'=-"' rl- ,t.- - i. ' ' or‘ l5 rkivltltf Qgllyeéystgfdgleflt ggilgd m» that the longer Arctic .s W Froclowl‘ Much w 1h w give the Germans a bet- _ lit. l) ‘Pd t in be imrngl alncc to slip 011% of their two u is i\lLll t c e S-imiralnszlg pocket ba tleships, Ad- ., N eer and Luetzow, into the _-_i_- Aglrfltxllltlgea for raids into the Norah .-\’l’l:l (iuuitxsav No, 3'“, mm an .. y indlcariwns Cour) rmcuitu ‘whether the battleship Tlrpitz_ Si» er slilp of the J5.000-ton Bismarck which was sunk after it destroyed lhc H006. is read for such act-on, It is evident t at United. Sires assistance in keeping the North At. lantic open will free a great iii n- ber of British destroyers for ser- vice elsewhere. U. S.-ARGEN TINA (Continued from page 1) llrr llizlllflfy. Mrs. Rowe mg w lJLllClJlCLl Liucrrisay cow Ev- _ rc, blui by narold Laird, l, i’. L‘. 1., and ulliiecr by, c, Oasiiclu, N. 5., 11.15 k‘ lit‘ . , “rill lo,..'liii lbs, milk, 68:4 .05. tile rials sir-sci by l$€\.Cil Hill dfnlllcl‘. a sou of Langwatci‘ urtuls Elixir-c Edward. lolmcr u" mm for Rcper Bros. and ‘il-llli IUlPlli-S, and a many ‘ibflliifl Lihllllplilll at Mélflllifhfi _ 1 as at the Royal infill- ASK (TAN ADA tlnafia bout: srraocoooo T" out ‘To: $l06.000.000. These concessions take the form of reductions in tariffs or agree- ments not to raise tariffs. Included are fresh apples, pears, graces. raisins. ptunes, tobacco, mwtrr vehtclrs and" rarts, rrul-"mwt- '~~ ~lll21»'l‘lfll1¢¢- A I'd/GE ic rcfrifzwisltcrs. cerfifn items of iLO-vid J till" Rh - electrical machinery and iipnnr-arrls. i1 e to obtain the agricultural and industrial mwfl n- .d tits W-htul‘. cry, office appliances and forest ' i lhar. Brit- products (Colltirulr-d from page 1) S ‘pct r.lil\vay' syscm, the ill] SLj p4; route l;e'.~;ul.s, ERSIDE GU AND PRINCE COUNTY CHRONICLE r YOUR HOME will be n lot warmer this winter I! you I156 Weather Strip around 4'1""? windows and doors. B“! it st Holman’: llsrd- ware Department. O U Q STORM WINDOW EYES the easiest snd best gadget for putting on storm win- dows. Will last for years- hcaviiy galvanized to with- stand the weather. Got n supply now. Hardware Do- partment. l O O O YOU'LL FIND a nlce selec. tion of Men's Gloves ln our Men's Wear section. Lined and unlined leather, woolen, etc, in the beet qualities and makes. See them next tlmc you're In the store. IIOLMAIPS SUIVHVIERSIDE ‘ififiifiaiyiirislffioolret if either‘ unctioll ls helo by the M5115 ii strength. There is an inti. HIM-on from London, however, "lat substantial Rusian forces may be flkhlllng their way out of that trap ‘as well as out of the Vyazmn pccket to rejon thclr Ccmrades in a closer de- fence of Moscow. GERMANS CL-AIM (Continued from page 1) fncreasediictbverfsoofim: it stllris increasing hourly,” the High com- mand said . In claiming the advanced p0- sition of the Gcrmun artillery before Moscow. lhr Ber-fin snckesman admitted that the Rcrl cnp‘lal’s outer belt of for- tifications lies a considerable l CITY COUNCIL =_<°Qnt1nv¢¢_!!9m_ rm i) tion re-sppoin W" 850F106 by a majorit you but since the. the Police Cyommrlsq sion had instructed Magistrate K. ' M. Martin not to accept their oath 0f Office as they were re acted by the qualification clause. e Mayor "mud to accegto the amendment. cmm- 0-3‘. 118m stated that he was in favor of the appoint-l merit of the three men. who are at‘ Drcserlrt on the force. McPhailJ Johnston and Dalziel, if the two dhclwrsed constables could not b. Jfliililfilfi. than“ first‘ on o . City Recorder, KM. Mar-tipping. wercd. ‘I would advise the Council that by the circumstances and facts, wholly incapable of re-appoint- 1118513.’ He added that they would be turned down on qualifications. Coun. MacDonald queftioned this and the Mayor told him the Council went by the advice oi the Recorder. Coun. MacDonald: "The Coun- cil hires the City‘ Rccorder." Hg added that he had advice of a dif- ferent nature from other sources. Mlybr Holman: "As an individ- llfll you can get advice where you can but 85 Mayor I get mine from the Recorder." Not Logical Qontlrlulns. 0mm. MacDonald com lained that he could not un- ders n-d why two members of the Council should override the rest. This was the first time it had ever been done. It may be lawful for the Police Commission to override the Council but “it is not logical, lt is not fair and it is very Hitler- itic." Stating that the matter of appointing policemen “after the drastic action of the Police Com- mlSSICH in dbmissinf two officers" had taken up much ime. he cla‘m- ed that a great deal of time could have been saved‘ "if the Council had been taken into the confidence of tihe Commissisn." Stating that it was not his in- tention to “further criticise the Po- lice Commission so 10H! as they carry out the instructions of the laws of the city", he said, "I can- not sit around this Council Board and see its rights abused or its authority trampled upon by any commission. The Police Commission have exercised their right to fire, now it is clearly the right. of the Council to hire, and I propose we distance from the centre of the silty, , No one d’v'.ll"ed how clcse the Germans nciuzrlly vw-rc. The Qcrmnns rjdmiwzrl the Rug- sians rv-"lc lIl"0\\'lfl'_{ fill lbossble rr- Sell/(‘s into the blttlfi- frtm Lrke Ilcren to the Sea oi Azov. Vyrlzma. which the Russians an- ci" t cmviws. Argentina, in retrrn, gets rvdvp- - v.1 sand 250.080 toils ticns in duties 0r assurance of the‘ w Illll‘ riic new hi1:- crritinvan-‘e of ex sti-‘sz trifis o" h-v l lvtklh-ih ' 84 nrcdllcts which ill l9"8 and 1W9 ma. being bolxuw- accoriritrd for s"mc 93 mi- ce-"t oil her tctal exports to the Untied, l.ll€‘ Mil b: standard states t Ill rclzlulst l0 the exist n1 Among other things, the tariff lsl Clml-hullfll swim. reduced on flax seed cnnnrd cornl Jlillllyllffi lre'f. cnrrsc wmls. q‘l"I)f‘ll"l‘O ex-l ' "cilzllg 503k tract, ccsein. irrllc-ux rlco oil, and rllig lire but‘ otcr) sféflflii. cattle hides, and‘ lllLlll, being of w ll be used on the viii be repliiccd by ‘it 1m and Auslralbll Mtrcd that iii- 1 that have go. c. "lciri, tire Urri d Ilfllltin type cheeses. Interpreting The War ' (Continued from page l) _ blc _f r the i _ _ _ _ "'- ll flllll ll '5 Gill 1d" “m lrfsector nn 800 mile rri v ii tor.- or. ‘ fighting iln‘ which Berkn, . l rllfiiculiv 's th-"t angel. being an f r ult o keep clpen dur- Lcncloli and Mcscow deal al- mcst exclusively in their com- muniques. The terse London recapitula- tion of the battfe scone within the 250-mlle sector is illrmin- citing but incomplete However, it does stale that the Naz‘: surged into Mczhilisk. mid-way bet-ween Moscow and Vyamle, but. were subsequently "eijectedf Mozhaisk is only 66 m les due west of Moscow. At that point the Germans made their clos- fbstlapproach to the Seviet cap- f1 Mozhaisk is cleirly e. western portal of one of the several concentric rlrgs of deiens ‘bio terrain that cover Moscow all the way from the Leningrad- Mcscow railroad in the north- (Canilulird from page l) - sire it \vcri'd likely do more r ‘hm "o"d." He apparently rrrd tn r pos=ilile danger of information lo the i "H's fellow Labor vurh Bevin-L entered "r Nlarrc ‘flat. Viscount IIi"I:"l’\ Amlifllffllfiil‘ to 1 had made ’r"0sp0"=ihl~. r ihc llniicd States ltmrrrollirt in “rrniu - l l" l/‘c tP-Bhlv lllfll- west to the Mcscow-Ryzlzan e attacked nnvwhuc -' railroad to the southeast. In- b s -""'-‘ "Y h "WP Wh fill eluding those t/wo railroads. f" Jlrs Mr Churchill t’) eight rafl-and-road lines fan ‘l’ °**“'"Pt of all carry-OWN out from the Moscow hub into » 11.11" Clnnwprlhl“ dd.“- lf!‘ the westcm defence area of j ‘ ' to a siat'm9't the ¢1ty_ _ ‘d ll~lf~x m Oct. ° ' ' ‘ ll“ that Britain 11-"! not The London recalpitulatlon “flw-f‘ “IYDMPW and 8llli>P~ accounts for only four of those lénxllmnrllt landings Oil thO glib}; oonverging routcs, "SUMO h.» attack followed one made 17519:: ‘ml/bin? to- critliy ‘a iir~ "cvunld News "h wad Elev is no cl altlwllkh ll= Jud nor-rich to‘d are Ri-v iise-‘i’ e-"l Igrlurs to be Y f‘ c"u p20. end. e 1,1 ch R . Wt» h stall? lathe west heThebynextes F,’ the south . Lcrdfi-Yrrlifnx icolshlvmade rs the gmorgnglg-vyaurio-Moo- 112th“ iKllicy of the war cab- cow mug, Mow” 34ml“ 9y. " ecuation of V uima when the Sit???‘ °°“ f.“.“°°..i§.‘.°. .“'.‘.i RussIansIuIwgzliaisI: lies 65 mileo east of Vyazma. Yet the Lon- don report ndlcaies that it was not from Vyimna, but via the Eoslavl-Moscow route. fifth" r""*"i.“*.r:.r* aim" m“ z i ca . “If, that is correct, it irldicalcl ‘S’? “i” “immm” "Zltilfifii ee n o n , . gust? for ‘the! pgfsible escapt 01 .,.““"‘ a! bad record in ‘h! Red forces in the vyazma rm- {Y Chill-chill N'Df‘n"!'fi bri1ly| “l o . t f“ M5 w“ "l\“"*' "I l m“ The Landon version also in- Qugilwg hfsh msslon OHM" dicites that Russian reslstanc; ‘ - - ' l n ICrIIhLIaiIIZIIF vyafi: regBgyngsk scene of the second revvflfll maloihencirgergignt of Rglignfga , v so r It'll m“: rIiost pcwcrgul new German attack now is comin! betlwgzn them. atleongfige :0:- l - r cow rou , M‘! ill". ‘rlrrrv "tllfttl an n rca e . rat... . a . newmCerman headway on either the Bryansk-Mcscow or (Ye!- Moecow routes was united. The 1 Rev“ uir i d the :9 Mnhvonls quest one f‘ ll" trick it unwise for "if? vi this Hure to have op- f} l’ of cxi-"s-‘n-g thc’r views ‘ll-l "lfilcr and that ii is wise ffltlrbcrs of the w"r cnfirrtl l“ "77l'll'l'l1s as=u~cnces to ihel vl'!ll rc‘ b~ at""‘<- . . is it 11nd‘?- _ . this matter Wrr- thc ccuntw about irre- rllle llff"l‘fl'l"l3s to the enemy 5'- -s < m“ Illifer month] y cramps blok- Mrv. distress of guioi-ltlu." mntlrltlllaneus-duo to functional y disturbances-try Lydls I. "nhfihfn vegetable Compound nounrerl Mmday night they had abandoned. was clrfmcd in hwc Gen in German hards since Oct. l. Military dgsrrtchcs frcm the V,v- azma are: said the Rrssians tried‘ again to break out cf ire encircle- mc-nt, moving ffirrvard in w~dces l5 cr more lines deep, but ran in- to devastating German flro which litlercd rcndts and ficlris \v'ih dead The Rod amiss s“ fire ‘o Vy- amm itself bcforo they retrcired Rml dyhflmllfd the main bilildirrgql it was clfmcd. ‘ Germans fussed the fate of the‘ Russian crrmnnicn is drckicd; the main forces of th~ Pusd-ms ore re-~ trcatrig ivificut order or plan. EfYcctive aid of the German air force agsfln was repcrzed for the, central rffensve. On Monday alone, r it was allegrd‘ 16 railway stations were partly destrnved; four trrins an-i eight lccomotivrs set aflre or vvrrck~dz in trains dnmaved and more than 3.600 motor vehicles de- . molislicd. GIVE DETAILS (Continued from page l) "The Greer proceeded then to’ trail the submarine and broadcast- ed the submarine! position. This action taken by the Greer, was in accordance with her orders, that is. to give out information but not to attack. "The Greer maintained thlsl contact until about 1248. During this period (three hours 28 min- utcs), the Greer menoeuvrcd so u to keep the submarine ahead. "At 1240 the submarine chang. ed course and closed the Greer. " The disturbance of the surface and the change in color of the water marking tho passage of the submarine was clearly distinguish- ed by the Greer. "At. 124B an impulse bubble (in dlcnting the discharge of a tome-f do by the submarine) was sighted: close aboard the Greer. "At i249 a torpedo track was sighted crossing the waks of tho] ship from starboard t0 port, dia- tant about 10o yards sstcrn. l "At this time the Greer lost sound contact with the submariner "At 1300 the Greer startcdl searching for the submarine and at 15-12 the Greer made under. water contact with a. submarine. The Greer attacked lmmedietmy with depth charges." Stark went on to report that the result of the encounter was unde- termined. ' He said that “the action taken‘ by the Greer was correct in every particular in accordance with hr existing orders " The Green brush with the sub- marine in the North Atlantic had given rise to questions by some op- ponents of the administration's for. glgn policy as to whether the Greer actually had been the aggressor. The report made public tonight was given to the Benatc Naval Committee by the Navy in Mlwhw to n. resolution asking that a. copy of the Greer’; log be submitted. ________ ____ Remember When (By The Cansdisn Press) ulnar-i, in bl time base- ballmlg years and ba tins he"? 01 mo i937 world series. WM 8W4!!! his unconditional release- bv New York yanked; d! the American League five yeas n80 Willy H9 beer-me manager of Toronto Maple Leafs of the International Loni“! 1;, ‘he m-‘ddle of the i999 season German held on Keluga and either route for Bunion forces l;lIr\lJIl\l3 Orel seems to bai- escape by . lvlt was let out at the end 01 the ‘and orders." He further question- glecting certain streets which, he l scarifier was to be I CV81’, exercise that right without inter- ferrerice from anyone." He went On to say he questioned the right of the Mayor as Chairman of the Police Commission to issue iristruc. tlons to the Magistrate “ordering merit was then introduced to tire t. _ a r .1, d m1 1 r him to do certain things which are effect that the matter be deferred £0,513? “In, r m!‘ w m e at direct variance with our laws, 0d "the right and the advisabllity| of the Migistrntc in carrying olltl such instructions." Coun. MacDonald continued by, saving. "It is my intention by this proposed resolution to bring this’ mitt" 11D 1°? lll5l>°5fll lh a PTO-l first three-quarters of the year. Rc-jlgu and 1937, Nanrod Minister- of per manner.” He concluded by, saying that the two men were dis-, charged for what he and many,‘ others CCllSld"l'€d was riot fl. scr-r iolls crime. ‘They had been re-ap_i pointed and could merit and in his opinion should be sworn in. The resolution asking the tem- porary appointment of McPhail. Johnston lliid Drllzicl. which was moved by Coun. strrns and sec- onded by Coun. R. C. Chandler was l then put to the vote. Councilors Stems, Chandler, Dougan and J. T. McKee votcd for it while Coun- cillors MacDonald, T. A. Butler, J. E. Blanchard and Henry Lapthorn were against. The deciding vote, in favor of the resolution, was cast by Mayor Holman, The resolution by Coun. Mac. Donald asking that the two dis- .-=~ charged men be sworn in was not given further consideration and the matter was dropped. Coun. Dougan. who had t0 leave early, reported as Chairman of the street Committee. He. was criticized by Coun. Butler for ne- said, were in need of repair. A part of Kin Street was in a. "dis- graccfu condition." Coun. Butler said. Coun. MacDonald asked if the ut on the streets again. Mr. Harol Messervy, City Engineer, replied that due to wet weather it was impossible to do proper work on the streets. Coun- cillors McKec and Lmliihflm 515° took part in this discussion. I New Pstrol Sought ‘rho matter of the Police Patrol was brought up by Coun. Butler who complained that an itcm in ' chasin Fllltthe two lnen' of the discharge, the t-wc men are ing th demand pay-. l‘ Coun. Chandler favored the pur- of another patrol as the- presen one was "a. sink hole for" City money." Coun. McKee ui-i nounced that the present wagon travels 100 miles a day. Mayor Holman also agreed that it was in bad shape. Coun. Lapthorn stressed , the need of replacing it with a new one. An important matter brought up, during the reading of tho COlTdlr‘ pondence was that of the propos- ed increase in the price of milk and cream. A letter from the Milk Regulation Board, headed by Dr. W. R. Carson, informed the Coun- cil that the milk and cream ven- dors were about to ask more for their product. Dr. Croken written l. lettcr in answer intimat- lng that a. more rigid enforcement of the rules and regulations govern- e sale of milk and cream in the city would take lace. Mayor Holman sai it was “s grave question" and cited the need or finding out if the increase was justified. Coun. Chandler stated that salar- ies and wages have not gone up and it might produce a. ha: ship on many citizens. He said the Council should demand n, public hearing on the matter. It was decided that this would be asked for. Another letter from the labour- er’s Protective Union requested "the city to raise the minimum wage rare from 35 to 45 cents in order to en- able the working men to collect this from any Dominion Government contract. A Union spokesman, Mr. Daniel Cou hlin, was present and ho presented t e views of the L. P. U. The Mayor promised that the mat- tcr would be given attention by the Council. A communication from the Fire Underwriters was read. This guar- anteed a reduction of $5,531.38 in 1g mining district of Glace Bay and insurance rates in Charlottetown r a new pumper was Dllrfihflfied- Ill also recommended that a Salvage‘ Corps be organized. Later n. resolu- tion was lntroduced asking that a new pllmJml‘ at a cost of $9.150 be purchase . Coun. Chandler was strenuously o posed to this. He said it was the argest sin 1e invest- ment ever called for by he Council and in his opinion was not necess- ary. The new Sprinkler was slip- posed to be capable of being yls~ri as an auxiliary pumper and were were four such Bumpers at the Alr-' port which could be obtained in ten minutes if the need arose. f Need Pumper ‘ Coun. McKee pointed out ma! the Underwriters had guarantee-l to. pay $5,531.38 if the new equipment was bought. If it was not, thrl Council would have to get a hose- cart with a booster engine at a cost! of about $6.000 He was in favor ofl the extra expenditure for the ‘wig-r gar and better machine. An am .. for further consideration. This was adopted and it was decided that a special meeting would be held h. night to discuss it. Councillors Mc-- K-ee and Butler voted against the resolution. , Courl. Chandler, Chairman of Finance, gave a comprehensive re- port of ilic city‘s finances for tile cclpts lor LiliS period amounted to $260,491.80, he announced. 1~or the. same period the expenditures rltili-z ouiilcd to $2l4.918.a0. He could low, scc a,_surplus itt the grid ‘of the Yea!" " the City could run its serum-rs from now until the end of Decem-l ber on 516.000. "A surplus is wr-rlln- our grasp," he said. _ 'portfolio to J. D. lvIcKenzie and ‘I'm: lollflwlhg 1950111919“ Wl-lsflnok over that of Provincial Sec- adopt d: ‘retary. This corresponds to the c RSSQIYCCI that the City Clerk tel BIltilOflZCU. to call for tenders for supplying one motor truck of a typo suitable ror use as a Police DBfi-lfll car, tenders to close at noon, Nov. 194i. Hvrovad by Coun. J. E. Stems and seconded oy Coun. J. E. Blancham- LITTLE GAIN IN H (Qqctkluriitvmmrpsrall He declared that the Red flmlc west of the capital were iar from encircled, as me Germans nad claimed, shut the Soviet govcirlnlclrt was remaining iii Moscow, and, most important 0i all, that the IlUJlWf-C" al superiority _0i the invading iorcee now was uililiiiismiig. "Fresh mlluoiis have risen to me dclelioe or Moscow.’ he declare-u "We iuiow the Germans can never capture it." mack oil the battleironts thous- ands of rtussian civilians dug oil. a new crelcnce line, twisting miles oi terrain into trenches and tank trail-S» for yet another stand that will come if tile invaders break tliroillh the long-contested Soviet positions beyond. ‘lihe Red courater-tilrust to the t the German salient nearest to the city was nu fiiisfiéi‘, located, (Lmormation from London indicated that it perhaps was about ivlomaisk, a town b0 miles west oi Moscow where German iii.- ,assured today for ltion adherents entered the lists in _ other 13 days old. the army organ R.d Star explained that Hitler's lust plan--to dgain a decision in a few da s-ha failed ‘h t at reason, it’ added, was the Nazis had required a force four; ~ to six times superior to that >f the Russians for any quick and fatall breakthrough, and this they had lacked. Contest in every Constituency in N. S. elections HALIFAX. Oct. l-f-ICPD-A contest in every constituency was the Oct. 2B Nova scotia general election as nomination d a y proceedings launched 65 candidates oi’ three parties into the battle for the 30 seats in the Legislature. The Liberal administration forces placed a contestant in the running for every seat in the 26 ridings. while the Conservatives entered the field in all but the llflglLsdflt Cape Breton East district. Six Co- operative Commonwealth Federa- that party's first major bid representation in the House. Eeritry 0f the C.C.F. candidates developed three-cornered fights in four of the five Cape Breton rid- ings and in Halifax North. Only four-ended races were in the four for RI IF YOU WANTA SUIT THAT WILL MAKE-UP WELL- ' WEAR WELL-AND KEEP ITS SHAPE. iThe tonic eflecl In wearing those Suiting: creates a feeling of confidence. INSIST ON SEEING THE ROBINTEX TRADE-MARK G m1 n1 n Iced B ritis/J M aru/facfliill,’ -.- l led." a similar situation found in surveys in the United States, Dr. 'I‘lsdal1 declared. This situation ls QXDected in Britain where food flllplllles are limited by ratio he added. but should not prevsl in the United states and Canada where abundant food supplies are available. Often the reason for such die- tary deficiencies havo been found due to lack of foresight and study 1n planning food expenditures rather than to low incomes, the Toronto physician declared. The Canadian Army, Navy and Air Force are much better off than the civilians, he added, be. causo rations have been devised “I0 supply all the nutritional ele- mellls required in amounts ade- cloublenseat ridings, each of whichJllmle 1°’ healllh" had invo Liberals and two servatives entered. In Cape Breton East—the coal Con - its environs—tha Conservatives left the fieid to Mines Minister L, D. Currie rind D. N. Brodie, Glace Bay business mun running under the 0.0.1“. banner. Under Premier A. S. lvfccMillan, the Liberals were seeking to pre- serve s top-heavy majority they enjoyed in the last House. At disso- lution, the government supporters numbered 22. against five Con- servrlilves and One CCF. member. Tlvo vacancies existed. Leader of the Conservatives is Leonard W. Frascr, 39_year-old Halifax lawyer who entered the Lcgislrltrlre for the first time just fl your ago, Neither he nor the 70- year-old Premier evcr before has .ed his party into a general elec- tioil. The Premier i; running in Hams, where in 1937 he defeated Mr. Fraser. His opponent. is N. D. Blanchard, Windsor lawyer. The opposition leader is running irl the acclumation last fall. He and A. B. Smith, the Conservative Cumberland member of the last House. are up against K. J. Cochrzrnc and A. J. Mason, Liberals. The Prrmicr will be atterrlpt-irig his fourth straight win at the polls. l-le was successful in 192B. Highways and Public Works in, i933. he bccdliic head of the gur- crnment last your \\'ll(?il Prcmlci‘ Angus L Macrloliuld rvciit to 0t. tawrt as Navy hiinistcr.’ Mr. MacMlilan later turned over his Highways and Public Works Ministry of Firiarrcc. Only representative of the third party in the House, Douglas Hac- donald, again L; running as CC!“- nominee in Cape Breton Centre. He was returned at a by-electoin in 1939; the party had no candidates in the last general election. Color has been added to the campaign ili Halifax North and Lunenburg. In the Halifax riding, Mrs. M. R. Lcwnds is in the fight as the only woman candidate a- mong the 65. Mrs. Lorvmls. a house- wife prominent ill community af. friirs, opposes llidllfilr)‘ iviirlistcr Harold Coilnoily arid J. Ronald Clark, 0.6.1". Down in the nautical Lunenburs’ riding, one of the four men in the running for the two seats is Angus Walters, skipper of the schooner Blucnose lvlicil she was brushillfi aside all opposition for the Inter- national FlSIWflllPlTS Rating Tro- phy. The salty Angus. Who "OW has settled down to the life of a substantial business man on larid. was named by the Conservative Party only last night. Walters and R. Clifford Levy are running against l-lczrltli Miliistcr F. R. Davis and Hun. G. E. Rom- key, Speaker of the House. Throughout the province, all Newsmen on Nazi-conducted‘ Tour of Poland? S tr i ct Regulations Concerning What Correspondents Are Allowed T0 See. (By Ernest G. Flscher) Iféifssoclated Press Staff Writer) AKOW, German-occupied Pn-_ land, Oct. l2—(Delayed)—(AP)— Twenty-eight forei correspond- ents out from Ber on s 2,500- mlle, German-conducted tour to in shown how the Nazis are handllilrslg conquered Ukrainian and. sPo territory today viewed one of 1m rvalled cities into which 600.000 Po- lish Jews have been segregated in- the general government (Germany's portion of the German-Russian par- tition of Poland). Tile tour is strictly supervised. The iiewsmen must have spacial permission from the high command to trike pictures; they must have official approval before asking questions. A spokesman for the governor. Hails Frank, told them that all of _‘ the general government's estimated ..*.l00,000 Jews must go into these "Jervishllviiig quarters." Ger-map CIIICIEIS object to the term "ghet- 0.. Police were guarding tho ame- foot walls here. Behind the walls, tho Germans said. the Jews handle their own postal and _ lice work and other public faclliies. Jews haviil ‘obs outside the walls are permit ed to go m and out, each weaxin s. blue star of David On his coat ave. Changes in Krakow itself have ia- cludcd conversion of the Polish Na- tional Museum on the old City square-renamed Adolf Hitler Plat: —lnto a market hall, changing oi the course of the Vistula River and restoration of the massive walls around the htllto where lies the body of Marshal oeeph Pllsudski. Poles aro not femaitted to have radios but may sten to German news broadcast bv loudspeakers at noon in the Adolf Hitler Platz. During the ride throu h Silesia the newsman saw khaki-c ad French war prisoners working the fields of German farmers called to the front. Sugar beets were piled awaiting shipment to refineries and the Irish potato harvest was nearln its end. t...;...r.r.;....r; Hearings oil ii. S. Ships arming WASHINGTON. Or "mini l ll- fAPl- “ for- Staies merchant s t. exits had denounced it as footing" into the wnr. (liairmazi Sol Bloom loirl news. men he hflrfkd the r ' ee would act. on the rrlerisnrc ran lrrow s» it could be brought ug, or house consideration the following day. Republican members conceded thr commiztce would undoubtedly ap- prove it. John P. Hurt/y New York spe- cialist on international and trans- portation law toid Ihe committee the administrator-r was “taking s leaf out. of Mein Kampf" in asking for partial revision of the Neutral. ity Act.—"asking Just as much u your opponent can't sflord to fight over " Flll , representing tihc keep America out of war con iess, as- sgrtcd the eAInir-Lstratiozl action on awning that it actually irltende to aofi removal of the prohibition against their entry into combat zones. Some members of the committee expffiaozlda beflliefllhht the Sonata Wow d e actor provisos; meaeun in rl-lo ope that R could be forced t the 11mg; on s conference repo . Six Congress Members to Go to Britain I They also drove throng forests of smokestacks planted over great deposits of iron and coal, volumes of smoke indicating their intense activity. For 30 miles along the nigh way in the Glelwltz-Katovtricc area they saw these stacks almost as thick as derrick; in an oil field. Approves rank members of the last House except two were re-nomirratcd. Lieut. G B. Murray, Liberal. vvlls beaten by the bllls- 5207-75 1°‘ ‘mall's w the l- 181106 units were said to have our.“ Alex (yl-rrrnrlloy ivhori he patrol in the last two months. was "quite an expense." He complained that there was "somethini "-51- eally wrong." Coun. Stems 181165 that the p011“ wagon WM in '- bad condition but that he would not see the way clear to get a new one before the end of the YBM- 3W" since it B-Pileiled l'° l” "m wish of the council to get one, he would prepare I r¢=<>1\1tlv9_-_____ Marge was the prethelt girl in town, Yet lonely boredom was getting her down; The men all left her at home, and attended The girls who pereprred but never odonded. Fat/l 100/46! with l/FEEWY ' "Ezglli llilsllm " a o ~ ESPECIALLY MM‘! m’ M, 1940 Odmllllfn- thrown back presumably to the VA“ cinity oi Boroulno, l0 mile; lar- r-her west.) In the two other areas of mat decision-about Bryan-iii. itself '11" miles southwest or Moscow. lllld above Orel, 200 miles to the lulltcl re-nominatioii in North. H. R. L. Bill, veteran Shel_ burns Liberal, announced his re- tirement. and W. T. Dhhlbhlhee wag nominated iii hLs place. oi the metropolis-general German machines were acknowledged these less imminently stabs were declared ing cosr. to the invaders. A Fighting Retreat The Soviet army iibout Bryansk Llflllld. satisfactorily; Red. terruption; and by Hitler's aerial squadrons. factor of the German control the air much for the llllhtel‘ vehicles-also was claimed. summing up said rrlllitarv dispatches, was ialllh! back in a fighting retreat to aireaay lengthening German assault cul- ltusslan counter-attacks were said meanwhile to be increasing in fre- quency; the Soviet transport systcm was declared to be still lunctioiiing “u” id t ovhl up w iou rl- s“ o be m gm Russian air force was described as still in heavy action in skies far rrom masu-rcu One of the major factors siding Russian resistance. said authorita- tive Soviet sources. was this latter failure to A relative Russian superiority 1X1 another arm-that of the giant iced tanks which were declared to be to. German the present results, oi the great German offcnsives, new b i d‘ ' Ziiéiiiiltliifaptrtiii One-third people threatening to be proceed- ing only slowly and at steadily ris- ln ll. S. - Canada Under nourished ATLANTIC CITY, N..l.. Oct. 14- ,llnd Corps badges Cw, gigrigiiFor C. W. A. C. OTTAWA, Oct. iional Defence Headquarters nollnccd last night Maple Leaf, Corps uniform. The Maple Len! is used for the its, cap badge dcsignis included in the ‘ design of the collar badges and use i1 unit in the badges of rank. Tile Atlicnc symbol-she was the myth- ifcal goddess of wrir and wisdom- ;,:_ _ orms tho celltrrtl design of the __ collar badges and uniformed but. l FlllVTlnY "I-“Pl- adequacy of proper nourishing fond. run m“, Should" bndgos 1s li-fCPi-Na- an- that Defence Minister Rrrlston has approved the l, the Beaver, and thcl, hclmetcd head of Athene its in- signia for rank and corps badgcsl of the Canadian Women's Armyl. . d 1mm “Mm detencd (APT-About one-third of the TEE? mghbeuvre’ of Bllglfclefllclll. Fwpe °f [he UM“ ,5l*"l°5 “ml tons. The Brnvcl" is confined w and the Urel forces were givrig Cnnndrr are sharing; __rrr_ common rank badms‘ i ground only before constancy with the p. opio of Iirlmm rm irl- r ~31“, h“. m‘, dlamormbshnp, NEW TIER, 00L H —(% -5 Biz Rcpublicon members d 0on- gnxs have accepted an invitation from the newspaper PM to go to Britain at the paper's ecponoe W obtain first-hand information on war conditions. The six, all mcmbole I3 5n of Rcpresentatives. will late month by clipper. They expect h be gone about three Week's. ‘Huey m:- John W. Gwynne of Iowa. Jos- eph Clark Baldwin snd W. fiber-g Colo of New York, WIlIlBm B. of Colorado and Richard P. Colo and Melvin J. Mass of Minnesota. The nrrvspirpcr said it hari invit- ed these six because they "are l. representative cross section of the Republican party in the Kori-e as regards the foreign policy of the administration." The invitations were issued "with no strings attached. rr-iili no re- sponslbiiifj: on tiuQCtrlr-e 't1‘.f"'l'! part, either actual or imp r-d, and. with no intent to infl-rczr» ‘i l‘! _votec, their actions or their dccis- ions in any way." PM is a supporter of the Roose- velt adnllnisimtioirs foreign policy. t r l r ‘fit Willi 1' . Corririvrr _ (i l rrr.r."i u , liwr l\ lllfflllll lor _‘ u“. f1r§1 [jury on (‘ill-ll s lrclvvecl‘ Dr. Frederick F. Tlsriiill of tile .~\- . 5c m 110ml 1.. of lire French irml |.r-2l€.~ll corn- Univer-silv of Toronto told menu Quit,‘ fsloélgsctrllfuqljl “s H“, ..1,,£,,?g,,_-. l, nirrnds. ulwli ’|l.‘.Ii\Pl“'l‘l| _ll"‘,§"lk' bcrs of the Amcfichn Public Health m. has» m, whim a ,,,,n,d,,., h,,_.,,,_ i irrz porvir or Li:- Il.\..l»_. Ill trance. Association lnrlrly that while ilicrc n," m. bad,” ‘s "Kvnngd as ‘m; ' . d cu I - rlrfcrl 4r l. lmiras ‘in. l” abllndalll mgd mmlllcllml l“ tiilvi from rlrc shicirl lvliirli bcars ' P~ .1.|uflnl Canada l)(‘l\\‘(‘ll\ nrlc-lhlril and onc- a man-S “N, of cfiqbof 3,1,“ -» m, , _ .1 1"‘ " ' 2;‘: half of the population nre not r-e- <- . id ‘ ' 1 - _ * ‘l. l " “M r “nllnlmll s“ ' lllillllIt‘l’-—'l-f'.ilf‘ oi ilrc bomber oolving a dirt adequate for horllth The mp bfldivg (‘{)“Ql§[§ n; m"... ! _v This figure comptlrcs closely ‘hm, Um“ p], n i ' _ r “"l'"~'-l"‘l- >__ with surveys mrlrlc ill (he United lymm, “in, h, . I __ m, ‘PM. “pguil; Slates sliolvlrlrr that ZIl)lll'(‘Xllllillf"_\' “hhgh i, Wcrib,“ ammfln WW‘ ‘ _ " 45.000000 pcopio arc l!l.'l'l."(l\l.'ii(vl_y mo,“ Am“, Comm" Tm, cum, r "M. o, fcd or lllfll-flfllllixllirll for luck of ‘ mug S bug,- lr... girvlrl of Atirz~lrz~ “Teal pulp" kllowlcdg” "f m“ l" m“ lbclcilv which tho lriicrs C.WA.C "59 me “lone-V “l” 5317"“ rm‘ arc irlscvrlicri on a scroll srlspzurl ’ mcd- ~ ion‘ bv it Slnsll Alan's Lczli at L‘.li‘1l llMI-‘Pl In rm intensive 5' \'c_\' of fmn- ignd ‘ w: presi- llies in Halifax, Q‘ r T: onto; ' __A_,_____g ___ ,l no exile and Edmriitorl “rcn ' ri~'rloi'nl)l~‘ RM“! SNOW; "i. (“urn GOIICl"l‘.f‘l!‘S in nwnv cf ti“ Pol 1-11,. l. -; ,- m. 7., ;_ g1,- c, . l ‘ . ~ - Kill"- csscntlats \\:-.-<- (‘llCf7li!if'l‘ .i iii lli c r.,=-_ .1015 m.“ o; sl)o"liflswf‘ “w. ll ' . tr’ 1" l‘. -.\ pns-Urllied ‘majority of tile indlvlduaas stud ‘or niclls away. ‘Sinks (iuvcinnlcllt. .43, .5!rjijijjjjjjjj.jgggjjg33117I14wmjxilrl-il-iiiijiij _ _ _ _ _ __